
In Punjabi homes this is maa ki dal — mother’s dal — the pot that anchors every wedding, every Baisakhi table, every winter Sunday. Its lineage runs back to the Peshawar side of undivided Punjab and was carried into Amritsar and Delhi at Partition, where cooks set whole black urad and a handful of rajma over the dying coals of the tandoor and left them to soften for the better part of a day. The slow collapse is what builds the body; butter and cream come only at the close, to round the deep, faintly mineral edge of the urad rather than mask it. What follows is a home version that leans on a pressure cooker for that long softening, with the option of a live-coal dhungar to borrow back the smoke of the original tandoor-side pot.
INGREDIENTS
- 200 g whole black urad (sabut urad / black gram, soaked overnight)
- 50 g dried red kidney beans (rajma, soaked overnight)
- 1 litre water (for cooking the pulses)
- ¼ tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1½ tsp salt (plus more to taste)
- 50 g unsalted butter (plus a knob to finish)
- 2 tbsp ghee
- 1 tsp cumin seeds
- 1 large onion (finely chopped)
- 1 tbsp fresh ginger (grated)
- 1 tbsp garlic (crushed)
- 2 green chillies (slit lengthways)
- 4 medium tomatoes (puréed (or 200g passata))
- 1 tsp Kashmiri red chilli powder
- ½ tsp turmeric
- 1 tsp ground coriander
- 1 tsp garam masala
- 1 tbsp kasuri methi (dried fenugreek leaves, crushed between the palms)
- 100 ml double cream (plus a swirl to serve)
- 1 piece lump charcoal and a little extra ghee (optional, for the dhungar)
- juice of ½ lemon and chopped coriander (to finish)
METHOD
- Drain the soaked urad and rajma, put them in a pressure cooker with the water, bicarbonate of soda and 1 tsp of the salt.
- Pressure cook for 45–55 minutes, until the urad is completely soft and beginning to break down — the longer collapse is what makes it creamy.
- Mash a ladleful of the pulses against the side and stir it back in; this gives the dal its body, not the cream.
- In a wide pan, warm the ghee with half the butter, add the cumin, and let it sizzle for a few seconds.
- Add the onion and fry over medium heat until deep golden, 8–10 minutes, then add the ginger, garlic and green chillies and cook 1 minute.
- Stir in the puréed tomato with the Kashmiri chilli, turmeric, ground coriander and remaining salt, and cook down 8–10 minutes until the fat separates.
- Tip in the cooked pulses with their liquid and simmer uncovered on low for 30–40 minutes, stirring often so the base doesn’t catch.
- For the dhaba smoke, rest a small steel bowl on the surface of the dal, drop in a glowing piece of charcoal, spoon over a little ghee, cover for 2–3 minutes, then remove.
- Take the pan off the heat, stir in the cream, remaining butter, garam masala and kasuri methi, then finish with lemon juice and coriander; serve with naan or jeera rice.